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- From: mccall@mksol.dseg.ti.com (fred j mccall 575-3539)
- Subject: Re: IS UNIX DEAD?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov5.192026.6384@mksol.dseg.ti.com>
- Organization: Texas Instruments Inc
- References: <1992Oct28.175009.7021@Celestial.COM> <BwxMKB.5Dp@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu> <BwxvEx.8Mn@unix.amherst.edu> <Bx577E.AIy@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu>
- Date: Thu, 5 Nov 1992 19:20:26 GMT
- Lines: 102
-
- In <Bx577E.AIy@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu> papresco@undergrad.math.waterloo.edu (Paul Prescod) writes:
-
- > > The vast majority of the Unix questions I receive as a user
- > > assistant are answered in the introductory documentation I have
- > > gone to great pains to thrust in the users' faces whether or not
- > > they want it. Once people discover that a system is difficult to
- > > use, but still don't bother to read the available documentation,
- > > permit me to suggest humbly that they're NOT right in evaluating
- > > its difficulty for the beginner.
-
- >I READ man pages. I HAVE books on Unix. I HAVE people around me that
- >understand it.
-
- >I am not talking about me. I am talking about the 80% of the computer
- >world that only knows 10 DOS commands. To them, Dos is cryptic. Unix
- >is another language altogether. The attitude that "it is there for them
- >to learn." is inappropriate. If I go to H&R block, I don't expect to
- >know as much as the tax guy. I expect HIM to do MY taxes. If I go to
- >the accountant, I expect HIM to do MY accounting. When they come to
- >a computer, they have a right to expect that we, the computer guys have
- >already made it easy enough to use that they don't have to spend hours
- >or even days learning it before they get productive.
-
- Yeah, and they want to get behind the wheel of a car and just drive it
- away without having to learn anything, too.
-
- >Unix is an operating system for people who like operating systems.
-
- No, Unix is an operating system for people who like POWER.
-
- >System 7/Windows is an operating system for people who do not want to know
- >that there is an operating system between them and their work.
-
- No, it's for people who have limited demands to place on the OS, so
- the developer can anticipate all of them. They also like soft
- furniture without corners and labels telling you not to run your hair
- dryer in the shower.
-
- >DOS is not an operating system (in the modern sense).
-
- >Somewhere in between these poles lies a place where one operating system
- >can be both easy and powerful, backwards compatible and futuristic,
- >graphical and command line driven.
-
- >OS/2, WindowsNT, PowerOS, are all looking for that place. Unix should be
- >too. If it doesn't, it will be replaced by something that does.
-
- Trying to be all things to all people with everyone doing it is a good
- way to arrive at a universe of mediocre pap.
-
- >Some things that have to be change about unix before it reaches that place:
-
- >1.It should have a more standardized, easy to use GUI (but still flexible)
-
- Why? Every other operating system has its own GUI. Why shouldn't
- each vendor's implementation of UNIX? What are you going to use for
- the 'standard GUI'? The problem with standardization is that it tends
- to stop progress, so it is a disaster when done too early.
-
- >2. It should have a powerful command line.
-
- It does.
-
- >3.It should install from floppy as well as CD.
-
- Some do. This should certainly be an extra-cost option.
-
- >4.It should run, graphically, in less then 8MB of memory.
-
- So much for capability. NT currently doesn't do this.
-
- >5.It should cost less then $300.00
-
- Arbitrary pricing? It should cost what it needs to cost to be right,
- maintained, and advanced.
-
- >6.It should have toll free phone support
-
- Hell, Microsoft doesn't even do this. Can you say '900 number' and
- 'long distance call'?
-
- >7.It should be backed by a largish commerical company.
-
- Everybody should get their UNIX from one company? Sounds like a good
- way to create another Microsoft. Who do you want to nomiinate? This
- defeats the reason that a lot of people are going to UNIX.
-
- >Perhaps "destiny" is it. Perhaps not. I am just the message bearer from
- >the PC world...where the market is. You can ignore that market if you want,
- >but do it at your peril.
-
- Go back to your PC, if you think you're such a 'peril' to the people
- out in the real world.
-
-
-
-
- --
- "Insisting on perfect safety is for people who don't have the balls to live
- in the real world." -- Mary Shafer, NASA Ames Dryden
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Fred.McCall@dseg.ti.com - I don't speak for others and they don't speak for me.
-